Media captionRobert Hall takes to the skies to survey the extent of the disruption

Travellers are facing further misery as airports, roads and rail continue to be badly hit by snow in parts of the UK.

Gatwick Airport has reopened after being closed for two days due to heavy snow.

Southern and Southeastern train services in south-east England are severely disrupted, and at least 6,500 schools across the UK were closed.

Heavy snow warnings have been issued in England for the East Midlands, East, and London and South East.

The Met Office also has a warning of widespread icy roads in the South West.

More snow

Transport Secretary Phillip Hammond told the Commons he was doing everything he could to keep Britain moving, but his Labour shadow minister Maria Eagle accused him of "complacency".

The government said that "challenging" road conditions were making it difficult to supply fuel to some areas - even though the refineries themselves were operating without major disruption.

The Independent Petrol Retailers Association claimed that up to 500 independent petrol retailers in Scotland and the east of England risked running out of petrol and diesel by the weekend. Filling stations in rural areas away from the main trunk roads were particularly vulnerable, it added.

BBC weather forecaster Helen Willetts said there would be further heavy snow showers in eastern areas of the UK on Thursday evening, with ice being the major problem overnight.

Temperatures could plunge to as low as -20C (-4F) in parts of Scotland, northern England and north Wales.

Areas such as Northern Ireland and western Scotland are set to be the next affected by heavy snow into the morning.

Half of Eurostar's services between London and Brussels on Thursday have been cancelled, as have seven out of 17 services each way between London and Paris. It said its timetable would be significantly reduced, with cancellations and delays, until Sunday

Police were advising people not to travel unless absolutely necessary - especially in the worst-hit areas of Scotland, Yorkshire, Derbyshire and south-east England

Police in Kent advised freight traffic not to enter the county unless absolutely necessary as gale force winds were forecast. Some roads in the west and north of the county were impassable due to snow and ice

In Wales, Royal Mail said snow and ice could hit mail deliveries and collections in parts of four postcode areas - LL, LD, SY and SA. The postcodes cover north Wales from Anglesey to Wrexham, parts of Powys and Ceredigion and south-west Wales including Swansea, Neath Port Talbot, Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire

Jersey airport runway remains shut

Airport operator BAA said all six of its UK airports were open, including Heathrow. One of them, Edinburgh, reopened after being shut for most of the past two days

Bournemouth airport will be closed until at least 0800 GMT on Friday

The Kent-bound carriageway of the M25 junctions 6 to 5 is down to one lane after a six-vehicle pile-up

The AA said it had attended 10,500 breakdowns across the UK by 1500 GMT on Thursday, with the busiest areas in the the south coast of England.

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Media captionRebecca Forsey was stranded on a train to Brighton overnight

An active search by mountain rescue team volunteers for missing fell walker Gwenda Merriot, 60, from Wiltshire, has now ended, but posters are being put up and hotels and B&Bs are being contacted.

She was last seen in Ambleside in the Lake District on Wednesday morning and there has been heavy snowfall since then.

Some 1,200 schools were closed in Scotland on Thursday, representing 45% of the total number of schools.

Some children in the north-east missed out on lessons for a sixth day and about 250,000 Scottish pupils had the day off.

More than 4,000 schools were closed in England.

One of the worst-affected areas of England is South Yorkshire, where snowfall of up to 30cm (12in) brought parts of the county to a standstill.

A total of 38cm (15in) of snow has fallen in Sheffield, the most recorded in December since records began in 1882.

Overnight, temperatures hit lows of -11C (12F) in County Tyrone and -14C (7F) in the north-western Highlands.